She got herself into many public spats in 2015 and Iggy Azalea wants to forget one of them in particular.

Speaking with Elle Canada, the rapper admitted that while she regrets starting a feud with an American pizza chain, her war with Azealia Banks is what really kicked off her crappy year.

"If I could, I would Men in Black memory-erase 2015, I totally would - that would be amazing!" she said. "Oh, God, there are so many things.

"I think the Azealia Banks thing is what really started it all. We don't like each other on a personal level, and that has gone on for many years - before the Black Lives Matter incident happened."

Her public feud with the outspoken rapper began in December 2014, when Azealia, 24, accused Iggy, 25, of not weighing in on the decision not to indict a police officer for the chokehold death of Eric Garner, an unarmed black man.

"It's funny to see people Like Igloo Australia silent when these things happen," Azealia tweeted. "Black Culture is cool, but black issues sure aren't huh?"

At the time, Iggy hit back with a lengthy Twitter rant, accusing her of "bullying", "trolling" and branding her "poisonous"…and a backlash ensued.

"So when I dismissed her, people started to think that I dismissed the whole movement," Iggy recalled. "But I wasn't trying to dismiss Black Lives Matter - I was trying to dismiss her because it's our personal s---."

She added: "I don't think the subject matter of her tweet was invalid. I just think it was emotionally charged and driven by something else, and the whole thing got so misconstrued.

"I just wish I had acknowledged the issue head-on because it made people think I don't care about what's going on socially and what's happening in America, and I do care.

"Even though I still hate Azealia Banks, I wish I had said it in a way that didn't make people think I was oblivious to the movement."

Regrets aside, Iggy is proud of her decision to go public in March 2015 about having plastic surgery in 2014. She just wishes everyone would stop talking about it already.

"I wanted to change my nose because I didn't grow up with a bump on it," she said. "That happened when I got smashed in the face with a soccer ball when I was 16.

"Now I feel like my nose looks the way it's supposed to look. But for how long do we have to acknowledge that I got a nose job? For the rest of my life? Am I going to be 45 and people are still saying 'Nice nose job'?"